Ars goes hands-on with Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception and finds that the …

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Nathan Drake, protagonist of the Uncharted series, tends to have bad luck with moving vehicles. One of the more memorable sequences from Uncharted 2 involved Drake climbing up a train hanging over the edge of a cliff, and we've already seen a sequence from the third entry in the series in which he's forced to fight bad guys on a cruise ship being rocked by waves. Recently we had the chance to play a bit of the single-player campaign and we had to deal with yet another vehicle sequence: falling out of a cargo plane mid-flight.

As with many scenes in the Uncharted series, this particular one started off as a somewhat clichéd action movie sequence. There's a plane about to take off and you need to catch it. This involves first finding an alternate route through the numerous guards and around the closing gate to get to the runway. Simple enough. But of course a plane that's moments away from taking off is quite a bit faster than a man running alongside of it, so it takes a friend in a jeep arriving at just the right time to ensure you're able to grab hold of the landing gear and sneak aboard.

And then things start to get rough. After being spotted crawling through the ventilation, you get into a fight that results in much of the cargo aboard spilling out the back, yet still tethered to the plane itself. This creates a situation not unlike the train scene in Uncharted 2. You have to climb along the cargo, which is currently fluttering in mid-air behind an airplane, to get back to safety. In this case, safety means a cargo hold full of armed bad guys.

Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception

What follows is a tense sequence as you have to not only successfully win a firefight in which you're seriously outnumbered, but also avoid all of the debris that's sliding around the now out-of-control plane. At some point the inside even catches on fire. The result, of course, is that the plane ultimately crashes, resulting in the image depicted on the game's cover.

The section we played only lasted a few minutes and felt largely the same as previous installments in the franchise, with combat and movement feeling as fluid as ever. But that's really the strength of the series: taking something familiar and making it exciting. This type of scene has been done many times before in action films, but it somehow feels fresh here. You know what's ultimately going to happen but it's those moments in between—when the plane catches fire, or a gate suddenly closes—that make the game so gripping.

Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception is coming to the PlayStation 3 on November 1.